Comment by lkey

6 days ago

The term robot came from Czech language in 1923.

The word was coined by Czech author Karel Capek, first used in his play (English translated name) "R.U.R."[7][8][9]

The term is from Czech word for robotnik ('forced worker'), from robota 'forced labor, compulsory service, drudgery,' from robotiti 'to work, drudge', from an Old Czech source akin to Old Church Slavonic rabota (работа) 'servitude,' from rabu 'slave'. From Old Slavic orbu-, from PIE orbh- 'pass from one status to another'.

change in status -> change status from person to 'slave' -> forced labor -> forced worker.

The word has always been about unpersoning someone and then extracting labour for 'free'.

The dream of a world where you can have an 'robot' serve you without moral quandaries, pay, or backtalk is right there. It's always been there.

"I treat this enslaved person like an object, but what if they were actually an object, so that voice screaming in the back of my mind shuts up."

It is that deep, notice when you do this and endeavor to stop.

You're putting a lot of effort into trying to make this "forced" and "enslaved." It isn't. Or, rather, doesn't have to be. It's just "work." Could be enforced, could be willing, could be accidental. It doesn't have to be work for "a person," it can be for a cause or an occasion. The "forced work" here is the same as my mum used to force me to go to church on Sundays, or I had to clean my room before I could play computer games. That was "robota."